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House Passes Sweeping Two-Year Bipartisan Budget Deal

The deal extends the nation’s debt limit through 2017 and also sets spending levels through September of that year.
Image: Autumn leaves over the Capitol the morning after the elections in Washington
The dome of the U.S Capitol is seen behind autumn leaves in Washington November 5, 2014. Republicans rode a wave of voter discontent to seize control of the Senate, dealing a punishing blow to President Barack Obama that will limit his legislative agenda for his last two years in office. FREUTERS/Kevin Lamarque (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS ELECTIONS ENVIRONMENT)KEVIN LAMARQUE / Reuters

After years of gridlock and frequent threats of government shutdowns over funding levels, the House of Representatives on Wednesday passed a two-year bipartisan budget deal cut between congressional leadership and the White House.

Seventy-nine Republicans joined every House Democrat in passing the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, which extends the nation’s debt limit through 2017 and also sets spending levels through September of that year. It also raises the spending caps set in place in 2011 providing for $80 billion in sequester relief.

The final vote was 266 to 167.

In what was likely his last vote in Congress, outgoing House Speaker John Boehner backed the bill, as did the man poised to replace him, Rep. Paul Ryan.

This bill now needs to make its way through the Senate, where Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has vowed to take it up before the November 3rd debt limit deadline next week.

The bipartisan agreement also includes long-term entitlement reforms to the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) program — the first major reform to Social Security since 1983 -- and prevents a spike in Medicare B premiums for millions of seniors.

Aides say the agreement is a byproduct of bipartisan negotiations with the White House, which have been ongoing since September 17th.

Boehner – who was instrumental in cutting the deal with President Barack Obama – left this two year fiscal “gift” to likely successor Paul Ryan.

“I didn't want him to walk into a dirty barn full of you know what. So I have done my best to try and clean it up,” Boehner told reporters Tuesday.

Ryan, the current chairman of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee and co-author of the 2013 budget deal, ultimately supported the bipartisan budget bill despite his criticism of the negotiations that brought it about.

“There is no doubt that a better process would have produced a better result. If I’m elected Speaker, we will begin a conversation about how to approach these big issues – as a team – long before we reach these kinds of deadlines,” Ryan said in a statement released, noting that his vote is based on “the substance of the bill.”

“What has been produced will go a long way toward relieving the uncertainty hanging over us, and that’s why I intend to support it,” he said.